Cathers v. Moores

The following opinion on rehearing was filed July 12, 1907. Judgment of affirmance adhered to:

Barnes, J.

By our former opinion,, ante, p. 13, where a general statement of the facts of this case will be found, it was held that “unofficial citizens cannot maintain an action on the behalf, and practically in the name, of public corporations to recover for conversions or embezzlements, or other torts or misdeeds of officials of municipalities and of persons having dealings with them.” Having been convinced by appellant’s brief, on his motion for a rehearing, that the rule above quoted is too broadly stated, a rehearing was allowed, and it is now strenuously contended by the appellant that we are committed to a contrary doctrine. In support of this, our attention is directed to Shepard v. Esterling, 61 Neb. 882, where it was said: “There is, it is believed, no serious question about the right of a taxpayer to maintain a suit to restrain the governing body of a municipal or public corporation from making an illegal disposition of public funds or property. Tukey v. City of Omaha, 54 Neb. 370. And on principle it would seem that a taxpayer should be permitted to enforce for the benefit of such corporation a right of action which its governing body has refused to enforce. If a taxpayer, to avoid the burdens of needless taxation, may sue to prevent public officers from squandering public money, there is, it seems to us, no good reason why he may not also commence and prosecute to judgment an equitable action for the enforcement of a corporate claim which the officers of the corporation have refused to enforce. Estate of Cole, 102 Wis. 1; Quaw v. Paff, 98 Wis. 586; Frederick v. Douglas County, 96 Wis. 411.” We are satisfied that the rule above stated is supported by the weight of modern authority, and it may be said that a resident taxpayer of a municipal corporation may maintain an action against *19its officers who have squandered or dissipated its funds, or paid them out for an unlawful or unauthorized purpose, to recover such funds for the use and benefit of the corporation where its proper law officer neglects and refuses to prosecute such an action, and to this extent our former ojfinion is hereby modified.

This brings us to a consideration of the merits of this controversy. The record is composed of a transcript of the pleadings and the findings and judgment of the trial court, but contains no bill of exceptions. It appears that the pleadings are sufficient to support the findings, both general and special, and so it only remains for us to determine whether the proper judgment has been rendered. It appears that the legislature of 1903 passed an act creating a new charter for the city of Omaha. This act, for some unexplainable reason, contained an emergency clause and went into effect on the 2d day of April, 1903, which was the date of its approval. Among other provisions it contained the folhnving: “The board of public AArorks shall appoint all inspectors, laborers and all other employees necessary to carry out the provisions of this section, subject to the extent and limit of the funds provided by the mayor and city council for the purpose; and said board of public works shall present the names of all such inspectors, laborers and all other employees, together with the time covered by such employment and their compensation for the same to the city council and city comptroller, and said appointments shall be confirmed and the compensation shall be fixed by the mayor and city council before said inspectors; laborers and all other employees shall enter upon their duties as such, any compensation whatsoever for services rendered prior And no inspector, laborer or other employee shall receive to such fixing of the compensation and confirmation.” Comp. St., ch. 12a, sec. 101a. When the act took effect there Avere working upon the streets of the city a large number of persons who had theretofore been regularly employed for that purpose. The city, through its board *20of public works, mayor and council, failed to comply with the charter provision above quoted until after the expiration of the months of April and May of that year. The laborers did full service, and earned the money which they subsequently received from the city, and the city itself was benefited to the full extent of the money paid out for the labor thus performed, which was actually necessary to keep the streets of the city clean and in a sanitary condition. In fact, the services performed Avere necessary for the health and welfare of the city. The pay-rolls of said employees, which formed the basis of the claims in question, Avere duly certified to by the foremen in charge of the different departments under Avhich the employees Avere Avorking, and Avere finally certified and SAVorn to by the city engineer before they were presented to the city council. The claims Avere also investigated by the proper committees, and on February 19, 1904, a concurrent resolution was adopted by the mayor and city council, as follows : “Resolved by the city council of the city of Omaha, the mayor concurring, that the pay rolls of the board of public'works for the months of April and May, 1903, noAV in the hands of the city comptroller be, and the same are hereby, alloAved, and the city comptroller is hereby instructed to amend the same into the pending appropriation ordinance.” Of the adoption of this resolution the plaintiff had full knowledge. The claims in question were not paid, hoAvever, until May 3, 1904, Avlien they were amended into the then pending appropriation ordinance, and such payment constitutes the basis of this action. It thus appears that, although’ the services in question were performed in the year 1903, they were not paid for until 1904, and were then paid out of the funds appropriated for that year. The trial court found generally for the defendants, and also specially, among other things, as follows: “The court further finds that none of the defendants in any way Avere interested in the claims in question, or the claimants thereof, or actuated by mercenary motives, and that each in his several relations in *21which he acted believed that said city was morally liable for said claims, and believed that said city had received the full benefit of the labor so paid for, and that all that was lacking was the sole fact of the omission by the board of public works to transmit the list of employees at the proper time to the comptroller and council. And the court finds that each of said defendants were warranted in so believing, and the court finds in accord with the said belief of defendants so referred to.

“These defendants having nothing to do, by reason of their several functions, with the employment of the labor in question in the first instance, nor said labor being in any manner under their control, either jointly or severally, and said city’s having received the full benefit of the labor had, as paid for, and no mercenary corruption in any manner appearing, and the plaintiff not having availed himself of his right to compel the submission of the list of labor, Avhereby the charter formalities Avould have been complied Avith, nor having availed himself of his right of appeal upon the allowance of said claims, this court'refuses in an equitable proceeding to mulct these several defendants in a judgment, as prayed by plaintiff.”

The plaintiff, however, contends that the acts of the defendants who, participated in the transactions complained of are absolutely void, and they should be compelled to refund the money thus expended to the city. We do not so view this question. Here we have a case where the city had the power to contract with persons to keep its streets clean and in proper repair. It also had the power to pay for the services rendered under such a contract, and while it may be said that its authority was so irregularly exercised as to render the proceedings illegal, still there was not an entire lack of power to perform the acts complained of. In Rogers v. City of Omaha, 76 Neb. 187, it was said: “There is a clear distinction between contracts outside of the powers conferred upon municipal corporations and contracts within the general scope of the powers conferred, but which have been irregularly exer*22cisecl. Contracts falling entirely outside of the powers delegated to the corporation are absolutely null and void, and no right of action against the corporation can be founded upon them. The rule with reference to the liability of the corporation on contracts within the general scope of the powers granted, but which have been irregularly exercised, is well stated in 2 Dillon, Municipal Corporations (4th ed.), sec. 936, as follows: ‘A municipal corporation, as against persons who have acted in good faith and parted with value for its benefit, cannot * * * set up mere irregularities in the exercise of power conferred, as, for example, its failure to make publication in all of the required newspapers of a resolution involving the expenditure of moneys.’ ”

The action of the defendants in this case was not ultra vires in the proper sense of that term, and we are of opinion that the city would be estopped to set up the irregularities complained of as a defense to an action brought against it by the employees to recover the value of their services. This principle seems to have been recognized in Clark v. Saline County, 9 Neb. 516, and Grand Island Gas Co. v. West, 28 Neb. 852. Lincoln Land Co. v. Village of Grant, 57 Neb. 70, Avas a case where the city entered into a void contract Avith the land company to pay certain hydrant rentals. Water was furnished the city according to the contract, and in a suit to recover the value thereof it was said: “Where a municipal corporation receives and retains substantial benefits under a contract Avhich it was authorized to make, but which was Aroid because irregularly executed, it is liable in an action brought to recover the reasonable value of the benefits receiAred.” To the same effect is the case of Ward v. Town of Forest Grove, 20 Or. 355, 25 Pac. 1020. The claim in that case Avas one made by a physician for attending persons afflicted with smallpox. The poAver to employ a physician was restricted to an employment by ordinance only. The physician Avas employed bv resolution. The court said: “The plaintiff rendered the services at the request of such committee, *23with full knowledge and consent of the town authorities, and the defendant, having received the benefit of his services, should compensate him therefor.” In Shepard v. Esterling, supra, which is the case most relied on by . the plaintiff to support his contention, it was said: “The services were undoubtedly extra-official; they were outside of and beyond the duties which the law imposed upon the defendant as judge of the county court; he could not have been compelled to perform them; they might have been t>erformed by any one employed for the purpose. The county got the benefit of Esterling’s labor, and it is plain, according to equity and good conscience, that it should render an equivalent therefor. * * * The method by which the county board undertook to compensate the defendant for his services was, of course, irregular, but it worked no real injury to the plaintiff or any other taxpayer of the county. It is not claimed that the amount allowed the defendant Avas excessive, or that a less amount Avould have been alloAved if the usual procedure had been folloAved. The plaintiff is not entitled to any relief, either in law or in equity, and hence the trial court did not err . in dismissing the action.”

From the foregoing authorities it seems clear that the city in this case could not have successfully defended an action by the employees to obtain payment for the services it is shown they had performed, and it follows that, having paid for such services, it cannot maintain an action to recover back such payment. It seems equally clear that, before a taxpayer can maintain an equitable action to recover money expended by the officers of a municipality, ‘it must appear that the city itself could have maintained such an action in the first instance. And so it may be said that the plaintiff’s suit is without equity, and he was not entitled to a judgment against the defendants.

Again, the trial court found, and it appears rightly so, that the plaintiff had an opportunity to appeal from the allowance of the claims on which the money sought to be recovered was disbursed. Having failed to prosecute an *24appeal and thus avail himself of his remedy at law, the plaintiff was not entitled to maintain this action.

So we are of opinion that our former decision, by which the judgment of the trial court was affirmed, was right, and it is adhered to.

Affirmed.